Contact Information: Contact: Christopher Gunn Communications Director American Small Business League (707) 789-9575
Small Businesses Lose Out to Venture Capital Firms With New House Bill
America's Largest Venture Capital Firms Will Become Small Businesses Under New House Bill
| Source: American Small Business League
PETALUMA, CA--(Marketwire - October 1, 2007) - The following is a statement by the American
Small Business League:
On Thursday, September 27th, The House of Representatives passed a bill
that could divert billions of dollars in federal small business contracts
to firms owned by venture capital firms, wealthy investors and major
financial institutions. One of the principal elements of HR 3567, the Small
Business Investment Expansion Act, is "Title V" which will repeal key
elements of the Small Business Act that have been designed to protect small
businesses since 1953.
One of the foundational principles of the Small Business Act is the
definition of a small business, which stipulates that a small business must
be "independently owned and operated." This definition was designed to
prevent large businesses from abusing federal small business programs by
misrepresenting divisions or subsidiaries as independent small businesses.
Title V of H.R. 3567 reverses that protection. The bill amends the
definition of "independently owned and operated" to allow venture capital
firms, banks or other large businesses to own up to 49.9 percent of a firm
and still be considered a small business for the purposes of government
contracting.
If H.R. 3567 becomes law, the nation's largest venture capital firms, major
banks, Fortune 500 firms and wealthy individual investors will be allowed
to buy 49.9 percent of an existing small business and participate in the
federal governments $80 billion a year small business contracting programs.
Critics of the bill point out that redefining "independently owned and
operated" in the Small Business Act to include firms that are actually
owned by multi-billion dollar venture capitol firms could essentially
repeal the Small Business Act for millions of legitimate small businesses.
Small business advocates are concerned H.R. 3567 will allow large
businesses to masquerade as small businesses and unfairly dominate federal
programs originally designed to help America's 25 million small businesses.
U.S. Census Bureau statistics indicate that 89 percent of all U.S. firms
have less than 20 employees. Opponents of the bill are worried the average
American small business will be forced out of business when they are
required to compete head-to-head with firms that could essentially become
divisions or subsidiaries of multi-billion dollar conglomerates.
The bills primary sponsor in the House of Representatives is Congresswoman
Nydia Velázquez (D - NY). As chair of the House Small Business Committee,
Representative Velázquez has yet to propose legislation to stop the
diversion of federal small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms.
Velázquez was opposed to a plan by the Office of Federal Procurement
Policy, the Small Business Administration Office of Inspector General and
the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship that would have
required Fortune 500 firms and hundreds of other large businesses to
relinquish federal small business contracts.
Since its introduction, H.R. 3567 has been opposed by small business groups
and Chambers of Commerce across the country and applauded by venture
capital trade organizations.
The American Small Business League has led the opposition to H.R. 3567 and
plans to initiate a study of political contributions by the venture capital
industry.